
Breton Girl Spinning
Paul Gauguin·1889
Historical Context
This Brittany painting from 1889 belongs to Gauguin's important Pont-Aven period, when he developed Synthetism — the use of simplified, outlined forms and bold non-naturalistic color — in dialogue with Émile Bernard. Gauguin abandoned a successful Parisian stockbroker career to pursue art, ultimately leaving Western civilization altogether in search of what he called 'primitive' authenticity, first in Brittany and then in Tahiti. His rejection of academic naturalism in favor of symbolic color and simplified form was foundational to Symbolism, Fauvism, and Expressionism. He saw painting as capable of conveying spiritual and emotional truths inaccessible to descriptive realism.
Technical Analysis
Gauguin applied paint in broad, flat areas of strong color bounded by firm contour lines — a technique he called Synthetism, derived partly from medieval stained glass and Japanese prints. His palette is deliberately non-naturalistic, using vivid magentas, ochres.
Look Closer
- ◆The spinning girl's distaff held upright creates a vertical axis — Gauguin using the tool's.
- ◆Her face is turned down in concentration on her work — the absorbed pose of craft labor Gauguin.
- ◆The bold outlines of Synthetism simplify the girl's form into a near-symbolic image of the.
- ◆The background landscape is painted in Gauguin's non-naturalistic greens, intensified toward.




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